author_by_night: (Original Characters by author_by_night)
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(This public post mostly refers to Harry Potter fandom, but can apply to others. I just don't know how it works in other fandoms in terms of websites over LJ. But if it's like that in other fandoms, or just the opposite, I'd still love to know.)

When I first came into fandom, messageboards were huge. But now, I've noticed a decline. Messageboards (and websites overall), old and new and revamped, seem to get far less traffic.

My question is - what's the cause? Obviously there are many reasons. Without naming names, some boards over time became so big that it got confusing for the members. Then suddenly, many members left, and it eclined from there. There's also the fact that members who had time to run the sites and messageboards and/or be active in keeping things going there had less time.

But could Livejournal have an impact as well? I wonder if people aren't choosing Livejournal over messageboards and websites, and that's what I'm asking. I know with me, I do certainly find it's sometimes easier to post on Livejournal.  For one, LJ doesn't have the "newbie stage" - the newbie stage being the stage wherein new members are more or less ignored on the basis of being new. For another, I myself am a very elaborative person; at a board, half of what I'd want to say would probably be considered "tl;dr" ("too long, don't read"),  so I have to shorten it. But when I shorten things, I'm often too vague and make no sense.  On many occasions, discussions at messageboards have prompted Livejournal responses, because I'd rather not write a full page reply. ) However, on a website, I do know what I'm going to see and discuss; it's harder to have a firm idea of that with Livejournal, because even LJ communities change.

Thoughts?

Date: 2008-01-04 05:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thickets.livejournal.com
I never was active really on any fandom message boards, though I've been in the fandom since 2000. Where I was active was mailing lists. Oh, the days of eGroups. Actually, I think by the time I wandered over to HP, eGroups had already been bought by Yahoo! (I still always type in www.egroups.com though just because).

Just as messageboards seem to have declined since LJ became popular, so did mailing lists. And how. I think that culture is largely dead all across the board. LJ is so much simpler, though for awhile, even though I had an LJ starting in 2002, I was kind of lost about where the fandom had gotten to -- I didn't know the communities, I only knew a few websites. Finally I caught on and for awhile, fandom has been in a real golden age. Personally I think it's just starting to decline all over though. LJ's recent problems have definitely dealt a few blows. I'm not sure where it will move to next, if it has to move.

Date: 2008-01-06 01:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] author-by-night.livejournal.com
It took a while for me to catch on too. I'd heard of LJ, but didn't realize how big it was becoming. Then a site I was going to had technical problems for about a month, and we all sort of congregated on LJ. (Some of those people are still on my flist.)

I remember egroups! I never went much, but I remember seeing them. Of course, I also remember really, really simple messageboards that actually looked like bulletin boards.

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